Word: callahans
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Playing at the Charles River Country Club course, Captain Ted Cooney lost to B.C.'s first man Ben Murphy, 3 and 1, in an upset that determined the match. Jim Bailey H) defeated Bill Callahan, 4 and 3; Bruce Thurmond (H) lost to Dick Grady, 5 and 3; Brock Stokes (H) lost to Ed Coakley, 4 and 3; Bob Ornsteen (H) defeated Joe Moylan, 3 and 1; Roger Fleischmann (H) defeated Nick Raffely, 5 and 3; and Jim Jones lost to Bob O'Donnell...
Crimson captain Ted Cooney defeated B.C.'s captain Ben Murphy, one up, but the varsity's Bruce Thurmond lost to Dick Grady, second, on the 20th hole in another close match. Bob Ornsteen lost, 4 and 3, to Bill Callahan in third position, and the Crimson's Jim Bailey lost to Ed Coakley...
Phil Herrera lost, 3 to 4, to Jim Simmondts, Tech captain. Jack Graef (130) beat Mike Holmes, 3 to 1, and Len Miller was shut out by Tom Callahan, 3 to 0. Bill Miller (157) was also blanked, 7 to 0, by Join Hirschi...
...right quantity sometimes requires emergency action. For example, last month a plane carrying the newsstand copies of TIME for British Columbia and Alberta crashed and burned. The American News Co. in Winnipeg called TIME'S production office in Chicago to rush all available extra copies west. Callahan phoned his distributors in Toronto and Montreal to strip their newsstands to the bare minimum and air-express the copies to Vancouver, where Pearson was busy making special arrangements with his distributors to meet the off-schedule shipments as they arrived...
...this, of course, means a great deal of travel. Callahan and Goulet have home bases in Toronto, while Pearson makes his headquarters in Vancouver. Callahan takes at least two trans-Canada trips annually, tallies some 10,000 automobile miles a year, figures his year-long flight log at about 20,000 miles. Larry Goulet's eastern territory requires some 20,000 miles of driving every year, 10,000 miles of flying...